Regional

Iras goes after GST cheats

The tax authorities are stepping up checks on businesses to nab and deter Goods and Services Tax (GST) cheats.

GST is now the No. 2 revenue-earner for the government after corporate income tax, and netted S$9bil (RM23.4bil) in the financial year ending March 31 last year, up from S$2.2bil (RM5.7bil) 10 years earlier.

Through regular audits alone, the Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore (Iras) has recovered an average of S$110mil (RM286mil) annually in the past five years from businesses that were ignorant of, or negligent in complying with GST rules.

Investigations of 130 suspicious cases over the past five years resulted in 20 people being prosecuted and 12 sent to jail. Iras also recovered S$37.6mil (RM97.8mil) from these cheats.

Assistant commissioner of the GST division Sabina Cheong has a team of about 120 auditors checking on some 3,000 GST-registered businesses a year.

They pass suspicious cases to Loh’s team, which has upped the number of GST fraud investigators from three in 2005 to 10 now.

Cheong added: “Some people not only try to cheat by not paying GST, but they even try to cheat and get money out of the system.”

Many cheat by submitting fake or inflated claims.

GST-registered businesses can offset the GST they pay for their purchases, known as input tax, against the GST they collect from the sales of their products, or output tax.

If a business incurs more GST on purchases than it collects from sales, it can claim the difference as a refund from Iras.

Some cheat by claiming that they spent much more on their purchases than they actually did, in order to get a refund.

But when asked for proof, they claim their records were eaten by termites, destroyed by floods or fire, or lost while moving office, Cheong said.

One man in his 30s set up a shell company, claiming to deal in computer parts. In 2010, he applied to register his firm for GST even though he did not have to as only businesses with an annual taxable turnover of over S$1mil (RM2.6mil) must do so.

He filed his first fictitious returns to claim GST refunds of about S$36,000 (RM93,650), when there were no business transactions at all.

When Iras asked for supporting documents, he forged two purchase invoices.

Pressed further, he claimed that a friend was the one behind the scam, but he could not provide any details about the friend.

In 2012, he was fined close to S$300,000 (RM780,421) and jailed for one and a half months.

Others run foul of the law by collecting GST even though they are not registered to do so. Last year alone, Iras found about 100 companies collecting GST unlawfully.

They include a 60-year-old businessman who collected close to S$20,000 (RM52,028) in GST from his clients. He was selling security and fire-fighting equipment, but his was not a GST-registered business. He used the money to pay credit card and other bills.

At the opposite end, there are businesses that should be registered for GST because their annual taxable turnover exceeds S$1mil (RM2.6mil) but they fail to do so, and that flouts the law too.

Lam Kok Shang, head of indirect tax at KPMG in Singapore, said that clients can check the Iras website to see if a business is GST-registered, so it is not easy to fool people into paying GST if a business is not authorised to collect it.

He felt that most businesses fail to register for GST as they are not familiar with GST rules and not because they are out to cheat. — The Straits Times / Asia News Network